Honesty and Intermediation: Corporate Cheating, Auditor Involvement and the Implications for Takeoff
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Publication Date
9-2006
Abstract
We examine self-enforcing honesty in firm-investor relations in an imperfect public information game. Minimum firm size requirements and moral hazard limit ability to raise outside capital, yielding a floor on personal wealth required to enter entrepreneurship. Credible auditing could create efficiency gains. We propose mandatory disclosure of audit fees and an interpretation of international differences in shareholding patterns. We endogenize auditor-firm collusion and extortion by auditors. We embed our game-theoretic analysis in a general equilibrium model to generate unique equilibria that trace the impact of the distribution of wealth on the existence of the market and consequences for development.
Discipline
Business Law, Public Responsibility, and Ethics | Industrial Organization
Research Areas
Corporate Governance, Auditing and Risk Management
Publication
Australian Conference of Economists 2006
Citation
GUHA, Brishti.
Honesty and Intermediation: Corporate Cheating, Auditor Involvement and the Implications for Takeoff. (2006). Australian Conference of Economists 2006.
Available at: https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soe_research/935